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Spirit Airlines is gone — and fares on the routes it flew from Texas just went up

For Texas travelers, the collapse of Spirit Airlines is not just a news story. It’s a direct hit to the wallet – and the financial pain comes just before the summer.

What Spirit’s exit means for DFW and Houston passengers

Spirit Airlines had operated from Dallas-Fort Worth since 2011 and had a full crew base there for flight attendants and pilots. In the fiscal year ending September 30, 2025, Spirit accounted for approximately 3.1% of passengers flying at DFW – approximately 1.35 million fliers – making it the airport’s fourth largest airline and sixth largest revenue generator, with annual revenue of $15.7 million.

At its peak, Spirit operated up to 30 daily DFW sailings, connecting passengers from Dallas to Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Las Vegas, New York, Newark, Baltimore, Detroit and Houston at rates that no other airline can come close to. Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport was also a major Spirit hub – one of the ten busiest airports nationwide in second quarter 2026 planning data.

Those routes are not disappearing. But their prices just went up.

How much more do you pay

Historical data shows that average fares increase about 23% – about $60 per roundtrip – on routes where Spirit exits a market. Total passenger volume also drops by about 20% after the carrier departs.

That’s the average. For heavily Spirit-dependent routes it will be worse. And the timing couldn’t be bolder for Texas travelers.

Aviation analyst Richard Levy put it clearly when discussing the shutdown’s impact on North Texas. “The most important word that starts with the letter C: competition,” Levy said. “The rates could go up. And it’s purely business.” He added that Spirit was “the anchor for these other airlines” — and now that anchor is gone, the reins have loosened so competitors can charge more.

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Airlines’ summer schedules have already been set. Budget carriers like Frontier, Avelo, Breeze and Allegiant are expected to eventually fill some of Spirit’s gaps, but industry analysts say meaningful route expansion will take at least three to six months. Travelers from Texas departing on Memorial Day, the 4th of July or Labor Day weekend will absorb the full price impact.

What Texas travelers should do next

Trade before Wednesday. Several airlines stepped in with time-limited rescue fares for Spirit passengers. United Airlines is capping one-way fares at $199 through May 16 on most Spirit routes, including Houston and Dallas. Southwest is offering discounted fares at airport ticket counters only through May 6. American Airlines has introduced bailout fares on overlapping routes and is considering adding larger planes on some of them.

To access these rates you will need your Spirit confirmation number and proof of payment. Book directly via each airline’s app or website. Do not use a third party as rescue rates may not appear on aggregator sites.

If your Spirit ticket was purchased directly with a credit or debit card, a refund will automatically be processed to your original payment method. Do not cancel the booking yourself, but let the refund come to you.


Sources: WFAA Dallas / CBS Texas / KTRH Houston

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